Gun range bag with organizing designators

ABSTRACT

One disclosed embodiment is an assembled kit for organization of a shooting, range, or gun bag. Another disclosed embodiment is a shooting, range, or gun bag comprising a bag, a zipper, pockets, and item designators attached to the pockets. The gun bag is configured to receive one or more handguns. The gun bag can further include a handle. The item designators can have different shooter&#39;s item symbols to organize what is stored in the pockets of the gun bag.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This non-provisional United States (U.S.) patent application claims the benefit of and is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/891,078 filed on May 9, 2013 by inventor Patrick Gee, entitled SHOOTING OR RANGE BAG AS PART OF AN ORGANIZER KIT, now allowed, to issue as U.S. patent Ser. No. 10/502,524 on Dec. 10, 2019.

FIELD

The embodiments disclosed relate to bags and cases for carrying guns and shooting accessories.

BACKGROUND

Rifles, shotguns, and other firearms are regularly operated by their users for purposes other than sport and hunting. It is perhaps true that most firearm discharges are for shooting at targets for enjoyment and improving a user's accuracy and speed. In contrast to hunting where relatively few shots are taken, a shooter taking advantage of range shooting typically intends to fire as much as the shooter's budget for money and time will allow. Thus, the range shooter is in a unique circumstance as compared with a hunting shooter. The range shooter is subject to range rules and regulations, which may include wearing of safety equipment. The range shooter must carry fairly heavy ammunition supplies to the shooter's station and maintain them in a safe manner. The range shooter is in what is generally found to be an atmosphere where the focus on safety and intense attention to verbal and visual cues about when shooting may start and stop, as well as when a shooter may retrieve or replace a paper target.

The range shooter is also typically also exposed to the inspection of other shooters and range personnel so that that conformity with range rules, especially about safety and awareness of one's surroundings, and personal shooting activities can be easily corrected. Thus, many features and situations all around the shooter must receive careful attention, both visual and audible.

Clearly, the range shooter is benefited by minimizing distractions by way of organization of the shooter's supplies. As opposed to the hunting shooter, the range shooter requires a sturdy shooting or range bag at least for carrying ammunition and small firearms, such as pistols. In addition, a range shooter will almost certainly carry in the shooting or range bag a relatively standard set of items in support of the range shooter's activities. While theses support items are fairly standard, their organization in the shooting or range bag has been entirely disregarded to the prejudice of the range shooter.

One drawback to a failure to provide for organization of relatively standardized shooter supplies at a shooting range or other target shooting venue is that significant diversion of the range shooter's attention from the firearm, the shooter's surroundings and situation, and the target generally requires the shooter to properly secure their firearm, either by laying the firearm down in a proper manner, engaging the safety, and/or unloading the firearm entirely. Thus, the disorganized shooting or range bag is a potentially dangerous distraction, inducing the range shooter to, in some circumstances, rummage about in the shooting or range bag without taking proper care of the firearm or paying attention to visual or audible instructions about range activities. For instance, a range shooter rummaging about in a shooting or range bag for their shooting glasses may miss the instruction to begin firing, which will preclude that shooter from taking part in that shooting session. It may induce that shooter to fumble to put on their late-found shooting glasses and begin shooting at a time which is against the rules or in an unsafe manner.

Where in other situations as poorly organized supplies bag may only be inconvenient, the prior art of shooting and range bags has been to proliferate a potentially dangerous situation without addressing the problem. In contrast to the prior art, the disclosed embodiments provide the range shooter with an effective solution to the inconvenience and potential danger of a disorganized shooting or range bag.

BRIEF SUMMARY

The embodiments disclosed include a multi-pocketed shooting or range bag which is integrally packaged and sold as part of an organizer kit. The multi-pocketed shooting or range bag typically comprises a soft or rigid walled bag with a carrying handle, where several soft-sided pockets are fixed to vertical soft or rigid walls and have top openings which are secured by a soft flap connected to a front surface of the soft-sided pocket by a snap, clasp or hook and loop connector. The soft flap is easily opened by lifting up on a lower edge to expose the contents of the soft-sided pocket. In a typical shooting or range bag, the vertical inside and outside surfaces are so covered with separate soft-sided pockets that the actual inside or outside surface is sometimes covered thereby. This is because the range shooter, while carrying a relatively standard set of shooting supplies, requires that such supplies be kept separate to provide a minimal level of organization. In contrast to the prior art, where the range shooter was required, without great success, to remember the contents of each of the unmarked soft-sided pockets, the gun range bags of the disclosed embodiments provide the range shooter with replaceable organizer designations for the exterior surface for each soft flap of each soft-sided pocket identifying the category of standard items which are contained in that soft-sided pocket.

In another embodiment, a kit or an assembly for organization of a shooting or range bag is disclosed including a central designation tablet of removable item designators. The designation tablet is preferably a flexible card having a securing surface on its two sides and a securing means by which it releasably attaches to an inside or outside surface of the shooting or range bag. The designation tablet preferably comprises two mateable hook and loop surfaces upon which small removable item designators are located until a user desires to remove one or more for application to secure to an outside surface of a closing flap of a soft-sided pocket. Where other organizer concepts using removable item indicators may have been proposed in the prior art, the designation tablet is available in a location chosen by a user. The designation tablet may be connected by way of knotted or latchable lanyard, small cord, a thin chain or the like to engage a handle, loops of fabric or rigid rings fixed to an inside surface or outside surface of the shooting or range bag, which loops of fabric and rings are well known in the art for releasably attaching objects to a bag.

It is an object of the embodiments to offer flexibility in the storage design of the shooting or range bag, allowing the user to customize organization choices to meet his or her specific shooting needs. Essentially all shooting ranges require eye protection in the form of shooting glasses and ear protection in the forms of ear plugs or ear muffs. A user of the embodiments of the shooting or range bag will enjoy the options of appropriately identifying a location for their large, wrap-around shooting glasses in one of the largest and loosest of pockets or in a smaller pocket for a smaller set of shooting glasses, thereby reserving the largest and loosest pocket for other items. Further, a user of the embodiments of the shooting or range bag will enjoy the options of ear protection of appropriately identifying a location for their larger ear muffs (whose structure can interfere with resting the user's face against the stock and are not desirable for that use) in one of the largest and loosest of pockets or for their moldable ear plugs (which are desirable for long gun shooting) in a relatively small pocket. A further customization of a shooting or range bag will be in the items used for securing targets to their supports, where user's, in general order of preference, will choose to store in the appropriately designated pocket a stapler, tape or tacks.

The disclosed embodiments use item designators that can be adapted to be releasably fixed to an exterior surface of a soft-sided pocket of a shooting or range bag. The item designators can also be fixed to soft-sided pockets on an interior pocket of a shooting or range bag. The specifics of the construction and fixation of the item designators can be an important feature. It is well known that the exterior surfaces of shooting or range bags experience very substantial abrasion, pokes, and shocks in the course of transportation, user searching of pockets, and placement of such bags for storage among other bags or large items. Prior art item designators which have been removable have been found not capable of remaining affixed to an exterior surface of the shooting or range bag, where such bags may often be carried through brush and tree branches and/or exposed to rain, snow, and extremely cold or hot temperatures. Further, prior art item designators have not been found to possess the feature of being washable, as are the disclosed item designators.

The item designators are small rectangles or other entirely convex-edged pieces of flexible polymer fabric woven, embroidered, or molded with a flexible polymer to form a shooter's item symbol, which polymer fabric is sewn and/or bonded to a back side of a small corresponding shaped piece of hook and loop material, which allows for affixing it to the designation tablet or to a closing flap of a soft-side pocket. It has been found that it is preferred in the operation of the item designators as used in its user environment to limit the longest edge to edge dimension of the polymer fabric to between 0.5 to 1.5 inches, and more preferably to between 0.75 to 1.25 inches. The lower dimension limit provides that that shooter's item symbols are instantly appreciated when viewed from a distance of about 4-5 feet. It has been found that the upper dimension limit prevents the item designator from being ripped from an external surface of a soft closing flap under the most vigorous of conditions. It is preferred that shooter's item symbols be embroidered or woven with a light colored thread on a dark colored flexible polymer fabric. Alternately, the shooter's item symbols are impressed by molding a flexible light colored polymer (such as an elastomer) to said dark fabric.

Further, the designation tablet is preferably ten (10) percent or greater in cumulative surface area on front and back surfaces than cumulative surface areas of all of the item designators included in an organizer kit. It is intended that a user will not desire to carefully re-align item designators upon a surface of the designation tablet as they are provided in a new condition, but will instead desire to quickly and easily simply move item designators to closing flaps from the designation tablet and back again as a user's storage needs for a particular soft-sided pocket change. If such exchange is not easily made, a user will be less likely to keep their item designator changes current with their usage of a soft-sided pocket of their shooting or range bag. It is an object of the disclosed embodiments that the vertical walls of the shooting or range bag may be rigid while the pockets are formed of flexible material.

Because shooting and range bags can become quickly disorganized with several items thrown into a central interior storage space, a preferred embodiment of the item designators includes a hook portion of a hook and loop connector. The hook portion allows the item designators to be removed from a designation tablet or a closing flap. The hook portion allows the item designators to be placed in said central interior storage space and easily affix to fabric items or interior surfaces of the shooting or range bag by way of the mass of polymer hooks on the item designators, preventing their inadvertent loss from the central interior storage space.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is front view of a soft sided shooting or range bag, showing hook and loop sites on soft-sided external pockets for affixing item designators.

FIG. 2 is a front view of an expanded set of item designators, selectable for a particular type of shooting or range bag.

FIG. 3 is a front view a soft-sided pocket having a closing flap bearing a hook and loop site and an expansion hook and loop site in broken lines.

FIG. 4 is front view of a closed specific type of shooting or range bag.

FIG. 5 is an open view of the specific type of shooting or range bag of FIG. 4, exposing a limited set of soft-sided pockets and a central interior storage space.

FIG. 6 is a front view of one form of a designation tablet.

FIG. 7 is a rear view of the designation tablet of FIG. 6.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The disclosed embodiments are now discussed with reference to the figures.

FIG. 1 shows a representative soft-sided shooting or range bag 10 according to an embodiment having an external surface 11 and a top surface 12, and a handle 18. The shooting or range bag 10 includes a zippered opening (zippered closure) with a zipper 17 so that a user can access a central interior storage space having vertical long walls, vertical end walls, and a bottom. The soft-sided shooting or range bag 10 can include on inside surfaces, multiple adjacent soft-sided pockets with flexible closing flaps. Upon external surfaces of said end walls are located external end pockets 13 and 14. Upon external surfaces of said long walls are located two external pockets 15 and 16. One or more of the external pockets 13 though 16 can have permanently affixed hook and loop sites (releasable attachment sites) 26 upon which item designators (see item designators 20 shown in FIG. 2) can be affixed or removed.

FIG. 2 illustrates a standard expanded set of item designators 20. On a front side, each item designator 20 has a highly identifiable shooter's item symbol embroidered upon the front side of a small piece of flexible polymer fabric. On a back side, each item designator 20 has a hook and loop back (releasable attachment surface) permanently connected to a back side of the flexible polymer fabric to releasably affix an item designator to releasable attachment surfaces of a designator tablet (e.g., see FIGS. 6-7) or releasable attachment sites of pockets (e.g., see FIGS. 1, 3, 5). Individual shooter's item symbols shown are for shooting glasses, ear plugs, ear muffs (for noise suppression), targets, stapler, tacks, tape, ammunition cup, cellular phone, GPS device, keys (such as car keys or storage locker keys), tools (such as small tools used to work on firearms, scopes, or range devices), a rain cover (such as for the shooting or range bag itself or a poncho for a user), binoculars, cold storage (such as an insulated pocket with ice or equivalent for keeping food items cold), a lock for locking the shooting or range bag, flashlight, and (shown in FIG. 6) camera. Selections of these 18 shooter's items for a shooting or range bag can vary. Accordingly, the number of item designators provided in a kit for sale to a user can also vary.

FIG. 3 shows a representative soft-sided pocket 24 permanently affixed to a vertical internal or external wall 21 of a shooting or range bag, with a flexible closing flap 23 connected to wall 21 at connection 22. As its name implies, the flexible closing flap 23 closes over an opening into the soft-sided pocket 24 to retain items therein. Upon an outside surface of flap 23 is permanently affixed a hook and loop site 26 (which may be expanded to expansion site 26 a to allow affixing of more than one item designator 20 in adjacent orientation). A user's thumb and forefinger are shown grasping a corner of an item designator 20 in a position from which the user may releaseably affix the item designator 20 to site 26 or to remove item designator from site 26 to indicate the current or desired contents of pocket 24. The flexible closing flap 23 can include an opening tab 25 as shown in FIG. 3 to hold a position of the closing flap when applying or removing the item designator 20. A user affixing an item designator 20 to site 26 can thereafter appreciate the contents of pocket 24.

FIG. 4 shows a representation of a single pistol shooting bag 30 according to one embodiment of the invention. The bag 30 includes a handle 33 supporting a small bag 31 that opens like a book into a top half 34T and a bottom half 34B along a fold portion 35 as shown in FIG. 5 when a zipper 32 of a zippered closure (zippered opening) is unzipped. The zipper 32 of the zippered closure unzips into its top zipper half 32T and its bottom zipper half 32B near the edges of the top half 34T and the bottom half 34B of bag 31, respectively. The zipper 32 of the zippered closure, when zipped up, holds the top half 34T and the bottom half 34B of bag 31 folded together along the fold portion 35 as shown in FIG. 4.

FIG. 5 shows a central interior storage space 39 of the bag 31 reserved primarily for a single handgun. Other items (e.g., gun clips 36, earplugs, glasses, lock) can generally be stored in the top half 34T of the bag 31 that opens along the fold portion 35 away from the bottom half 34B. Two soft-sided pockets 37 and 38 are mounted to an interior surface in the top half 34T of the bag 31 and have closing flaps as shown. Each of the closing flaps of the pockets 37,38 includes a hook and loop site (releasable attachment site) 26 to which an item designator 20 can releasably be affixed. For a pistol shooting bag, item designators 20 can be limited to a set of earplugs, glasses, ammunition bowl, and a lock.

The specific example of FIGS. 4 and 5 demonstrate that specific shooting and range bags are known in the art to consist of generally standard shooter's items that will be found in that specific shooting and range bag. Thus, the kit for that that shooting and range bag can limit the item designators originally supplied with a designation tablet to only a few of those available from a supplier. In the case of a general shooting or range bag as is shown in FIG. 1, the kit can be provided with a designation tablet with all the item designators available from a supplier.

FIGS. 6 and 7 show a desired designation tablet 40 having a cord opening 43 and respectively a front side 41 and a rear side 44, each bearing item designators 20 in such a wide range that they are incorporated into a kit including a general purpose shooting or range bag. The designation tablet 40 has releasable attachment surfaces (hook and loop surfaces) on the front side and the rear side to receive the item designators 20.

The above design options will sometimes present the skilled designer with considerable and wide ranges from which to choose appropriate apparatus and method modifications for the above examples. However, the objects of the disclosed embodiments will still be obtained by that skilled designer applying such design options in an appropriate manner. 

1-15. (canceled)
 16. A shooting or range bag comprising: a bag having a first half and a second half foldable together along a fold portion to form an interior space adapted to receive a handgun; a zipper including a first zipper half near a first edge of the first half of the bag and a second zipper half near an edge of the second half of the bag, wherein the first zipper half and the second zipper half zip up together to hold the first half and the second half folded together along the fold portion to hold the bag around the handgun; at least two or more separated pockets mounted to an interior surface of the first half of the bag, each separated pocket adapted to contain and support at least one shooting item, each separated pocket having a closing flap adapted to close over an opening into the separated pocket and a releasable attachment site mounted on an external surface of the closing flap; and two or more releasable item designators releasably fixed to the releasable attachment site on the two or more closing flaps of the at least two or more separated pockets.
 17. The shooting or range bag of claim 16, further comprising: a handle coupled to an exterior surface of the bag.
 18. The shooting or range bag of claim 16, wherein each of the two or more releasable item designators have a shooter's item symbol chosen from a group consisting of shooting glasses, ear plugs, ammunition cup, and a lock.
 19. The shooting or range bag of claim 16, wherein the zipper is a lockable zipper to lock the first half and the second half folded together around the handgun with a lock.
 20. The shooting or range bag of claim 16, further comprising: a pair of loops coupled to the interior surface of the first half of the bag, wherein the pair of fabric loops are configured to hold a gun clip.
 21. A shooting or range bag comprising: a bag having a top with a top opening into an interior storage space having vertical long walls, vertical end walls, and a bottom, the interior storage space to receive one or more handguns; a zipper coupled to the bag around the top opening, the zipper to selectively close the top opening into the interior storage space of the bag; one or more external pockets coupled to an outer surface of the bag, each of the one or more external pockets adapted to contain and support at least one shooter's item, each of the one or more external pockets having an external surface with a releasable attachment site, the releasable attachment site adapted to receive a releasable item designator; and one or more releasable item designators releasably coupled to each releasable attachment site of the one or more external pockets, wherein each releasable item designator has an item symbol on a front side and a releasable attachment surface on a back side adapted to releasably affix the releasable item designator to the releasable attachment site of the one or more external pockets.
 22. The shooting or range bag of claim 21, further comprising: a first handle coupled to a first exterior surface of the bag.
 23. The shooting or range bag of claim 22, further comprising: a second handle coupled to a second exterior surface of the bag opposite the first exterior surface.
 24. The shooting or range bag of claim 21, wherein the one or more releasable item designators have a shooter's item symbol chosen from a group consisting of shooting glasses, ear plugs, ammunition cup, and a lock.
 25. The shooting or range bag of claim 21, wherein the zipper is a lockable zipper to lock close the top opening into the interior storage space of the bag.
 26. The shooting or range bag of claim 21, further comprising: one or more pockets mounted to a vertical long wall of the interior storage space, each of the one more pockets adapted to contain and support at least one shooting item, each of the one or more pockets having a closing flap adapted to close over an opening into the pocket and a releasable attachment site mounted on an external surface of the closing flap.
 27. The shooting or range bag of claim 26, further comprising: one or more releasable item designators releasably coupled to each releasable attachment site of the one or more pockets, wherein each releasable item designator has an item symbol on a front side and a releasable attachment surface on a back side adapted to releasably affix the releasable item designator to the releasable attachment site of the one or more external pockets.
 28. A shooting or range bag comprising: a bag having a top with a top opening into an interior storage space having vertical long walls, vertical end walls, and a bottom, the interior storage space to receive one or more handguns; a zipper coupled to the bag around the top opening, the zipper to selectively close the top opening into the interior storage space of the bag; a first handle coupled to a first exterior surface of the bag; one or more external pockets coupled to a second exterior surface of the bag, each of the one or more external pockets adapted to contain and support at least one shooter's item, each of the one or more external pockets having an external surface with a releasable attachment site, the releasable attachment site adapted to receive a releasable item designator; and one or more releasable item designators releasably coupled to each releasable attachment site of the one or more external pockets, wherein each releasable item designator has an item symbol on a front side and a releasable attachment surface on a back side adapted to releasably affix the releasable item designator to the releasable attachment site of the one or more external pockets.
 29. The shooting or range bag of claim 28, further comprising: a second handle coupled to a second exterior surface of the bag opposite the first exterior surface.
 30. The shooting or range bag of claim 28, wherein the one or more releasable item designators have a shooter's item symbol chosen from a group consisting of shooting glasses, ear plugs, ammunition cup, and a lock.
 31. The shooting or range bag of claim 28, wherein the zipper is a lockable zipper to lock close the top opening into the interior storage space of the bag.
 32. The shooting or range bag of claim 28, wherein the external surface of the external pockets is a closing flap adapted to close over an opening into the pocket and the releasable attachment site is mounted on an external surface of the closing flap.
 33. The shooting or range bag of claim 32, wherein the one or more releasable item designators has an item symbol on a front side and a releasable attachment surface on a back side adapted to releasably affix the releasable item designator to the releasable attachment site of the one or more external pockets.
 34. The shooting or range bag of claim 33, wherein the one or more item symbols of the one or more releasable item designators is a shooter's item symbol chosen from a group consisting of shooting glasses, ear plugs, ammunition cup, and a lock. 